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Eskimo Carvings by James A. Houston
If you ask an Eskimo of the Canadian Eastern Arctic if he carves objects, sinourak, he will answer “Certainly”! For in a land where life is governed by hunting and where any one area will produce only enough game to support a few families there is no specialization. Every family must be able to do everything - - make a pair of boots, build a kayak, fashion a knife, shape a harpoon, sing a song and, of course, make a pleasing object of art. Many experts believe that these people are producing an art of stone, bone and ivory carving equal to or surpassing any native art on this Continent. It seems strange to find a rich, productive art flourishing in this harsh land. Living a semi-nomadic existence in tents and snow houses along the barren shores of Hudson Bay and Baffin Island, the Eskimos are hindered by a severe climate which prevents food growing - - food, which has always been the life blood of civilization. Fewer than 12,000 in number, scattered in isolated groups over an area of more than half-a-million square miles, they relied entirely until recent years on the sea and land animals around them to provide food for themselves and fat to heat their dwellings. It is probably that the Eskimos first introduced tailored clothing in America. Their parkas, trousers and boots of caribou skin cannot be equaled for comfort and warmth by anything we have been able to design. The slim kayak is said to be the world’s most perfectly devised water craft. The seal oil lamp, the harpoon, the fish spear are unique in design and exactly suited to their requirements. The Eskimo women produce objects of rare design and beauty, utilizing all their amazing skill at needlework in the delicate blending of furs. The Eskimo possesses cheerfulness and tranquility of mind to a degree that seems almost unknown in our own civilization. He finds time in his life of hardships to laugh, to dance and to sing songs, to carve the fine plastic forms that perfectly portray his cultural rise above his savage surroundings, as well as his feeling about the people and the life around them. This marked trait of playfulness and good humour, so characteristic of the Eskimo nature, is reflected in his carvings. The surge of civilization that swept this Continent in the past several centuries stamped out many Indian ritualistic tribal arts, leaving in its wake a meaningless souvenir trade. But the geographical remoteness of the Eskimo protected him and the link between the past and the present in his art is as yet unbroken. How old are the earliest of the stone and ivory carvings discovered in the Eastern Arctic? Certainly they are centuries old, but to date them would be 1
Until 1962, Mr. Houston was employed by the Arctic Division of the Canadian Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources. His duties entailed the encouragement of the Eskimo handicrafts industry and the development of markets for the carvings produced by the northern people. Mr. Houston is a talented artist whose paintings and sketches of the Canadian Arctic are known internationally.